Stop Ecocide Foundation was at the 21st Session of the Assembly of States Parties
to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, The Hague, 5th-10th December 2022.
The Rome Statute is intended to address the “most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole”, those acts which most “threaten the peace, security and wellbeing of the world”.
Mass damage and destruction of vital ecosystems through human activity now constitutes precisely such a threat on a global scale. Such damage and destruction, now increasingly referred to as “ecocide”, not only has direct and devastating consequences for communities and nations now, but also the severest of implications for the future of human civilisation as a whole, as well as for the wider community of species with whom we share our planetary home.
There is strong relevance to the ICC’s remit, therefore, of the inclusion of ecocide within the scope of the Rome Statute. This is being recognised and discussed by a growing number of States Parties, as well as by the Court itself, as acknowledged during the 20th anniversary conference on 1st July of this year.
This side event examines the rapid global progress of this discussion, the importance of the consensus legal definition of ecocide (Independent Expert Panel, June 2021) in that progress, and the potential for the ICC to play a decisive role in addressing the greatest challenge of our time.
The event is available in English, French, Spanish and Arabic.
Speakers:
Hon Elly van Vliet, Honorary Consul of Vanuatu in The Netherlands
Judge Chile Eboe-Osuji, Former ICC President
Philippe Sands KC, University College London, Matrix Law
Darryl Robinson, Professor of Law, Queens University Canada
Jojo Mehta, Chair, Stop Ecocide Foundation
Josh Oxby, UN Youth Advisor
Moderator: